Trump pits insiders vs. populists

1of2President-elect Donald Trump has named Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus as his chief of staff.Photo: JIM WATSON, Staff

2of2(FILES)(COMBO) This combination of pictures created on November 11, 2016 shows Republican National Convention Chairman Reince Priebus (L) and Donald Trump's campaign Chief Executive Officer Stephen K. Bannon. US President-elect Donald Trump made the first top appointments of his new administration November 13, 2016, naming Reince Priebus his White House chief of staff and Steve Bannon as his chief strategist and senior counselor. / AFP PHOTO / STFSTF/AFP/Getty ImagesPhoto: STF, Stringer

WASHINGTON - President-elect Donald Trump on Sunday chose Reince Priebus, the chairman of the Republican National Committee and a loyal campaign adviser, to be his White House chief of staff, turning to a Washington insider whose friendship with House Speaker Paul Ryan could help secure early legislative victories.

In selecting Priebus, Trump passed over Stephen Bannon, the right-wing media provocateur. But he named Bannon his senior counselor and chief West Wing strategist, signaling an embrace of the fringe ideology long advanced by Bannon and a continuing disdain for his party's establishment.

The dual appointments - with Bannon given top billing in the official announcement - instantly created rival centers of power in the Trump White House.

Bannon's selection demonstrated the power in Trump's rise of grass-roots activists who have long traded in the conspiracy theories and sometimes racist rhetoric of Breitbart News, the website that Bannon ran for much of the last decade.

The site has accused President Barack Obama of "importing more hating Muslims"; compared Planned Parenthood's work to the Holocaust; called Bill Kristol, the conservative commentator, a "renegade Jew"; and advised female victims of online harassment to "just log off" and stop "screwing up the internet for men," illustrating that point with a picture of a crying child.

The grass-roots activists may be angered by the selection of Priebus as chief of staff, viewing him as a deal-maker who will be too eager to push the new president toward compromise on issues like taxes, immigration, trade, health care and the environment.

In a statement Sunday afternoon, the transition team emphasized that the two men would work "as equal partners to transform the federal government."

That simultaneous announcement is consistent with Trump's management style in his businesses and in his campaign: creating rival power structures beneath him and encouraging them to battle it out.

It is also a reflection of who has the ear of the president-elect: his children, especially Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner. Both of them had argued that the chief of staff job should not be held by someone too controversial, according to several people familiar with the decision-making inside the transition effort. Kushner is likely to wield great influence over the new president regardless of whether he holds a formal title. Kushner, who has no experience in politics or government, often gets the final word in advising Trump.

But while Trump apparently feels comfortable with Priebus, the people with knowledge of his weekend decision said that Bannon was still the adviser who was better able to talk forcefully to the president-elect during difficult moments.

The transition team appeared eager to appease concerns among Trump's most fervent supporters that choosing Priebus meant that the president-elect had already caved to the Washington "swamp" he had promised to drain. The team also wanted to mollify Bannon, and to that end, the official statement mentioned Bannon first.

"We had a very successful partnership on the campaign, one that led to victory," Bannon said in the statement. "We will have that same partnership in working to help President-elect Trump achieve his agenda."

Priebus said he looked forward to working with Bannon and Trump "to create an economy that works for everyone, secure our borders, repeal and replace Obamacare and destroy radical Islamic terrorism."

Priebus is expected to have multiple deputies, including Katie Walsh, the chief of staff of the Republican National Committee, who is close to Priebus and helped ensure a tight working relationship between the party's operational infrastructure and Trump's campaign.